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Journal: 100 Years / DRIVING HEADINGS IN ROCK TUNNELS Transactions of the American Institute of Mining Engineers New York 1910
By W. L. Saunders
RBH Note: In the early days of drill & blast tunneling the jobs utilized large crews of drillers and muckers. Advance per round was limited (typically around four feet) but two rounds per 8-hour shift
Jan 1, 2011
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Journal: 100 Years / DU PONT BLASTING POWDER 1913
By Robert Hopler
In use, blasting powder is exploded by a spark from fuse, electric squib or miner’s squib, or by a primer of some high explosive, the last being employed only in heavy charges on open work. In mining,
Jan 1, 2014
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Journal: 100 Years / du Pont Magazine E.I. du Pont de Nemours Powder Company
By DuPont Magazine
RBH Note: as stated many times in these articles, frozen dynamite was one of the greatest hazards facing the blaster. It wasn’t until the late 1920s that it was solved for good, with the introduction
Jan 1, 2015
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Journal: 100 Years / E.I. du Pont de Nemours Powder Co. Wilmington, Del 1910
By Robert Hopler
INTRODUCTION NOT so very many years ago the farm was about the last place where one would expect to find up-to-date mechanical appliances. Steam, explosives, electricity—the factors which have made th
Jan 1, 2011
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Journal: 100 Years / E.I. DU PONT DE NEMOURS POWDER COMPANY
By Robert Hopler
Blasting powder is a slow-acting, black, granular explosive made of sulphur, charcoal and either potassium nitrate (saltpetre) or sodium nitrate. The blasting powder containing potassium nitrate is kn
Jan 1, 2014
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Journal: 100 Years / E.I. DU PONT DE NEMOURS POWDER COMPANY PRICE LIST NO. 4 APRIL 1, 1911
By Robert Hopler
RBH Note: At the time of this price list the handwriting was already on the wall regarding the ultimate breakup of the company under the Sherman Anti-Trust Act. The brand names Atlas and Hercules, not
Jan 1, 2012
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Journal: 100 Years / Engineering News New York January 5, 1905 Methods and Cost of Blasting and Handling Boulders
By Daniel Hauer
In considering the cost of rock excavation, but little attention has been given to the economical handling and breaking up of boulders. Very few records seem to have been kept as to the cost of such w
Jan 1, 2006
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Journal: 100 Years / Engineering News New York January 5, 1905 Methods and Cost of Blasting and Handling Boulders (52912f89-42e4-4811-8c7f-344764181b42)
By Daniel Hauer
Blocking. (5) The “blocking” of boulders is a much cheaper way of breaking them up than “mud capping.” It should always be used in preference to that method except when too much time will be consumed
Jan 1, 2006
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Journal: 100 Years / FIG. 2. Bridge wrecked by material from blast near Chattanooga, Tenn
By Robert Hopler
A blast caused the destruction of a bridge and loaded freight train and the death of three men, near Chattanooga, Tenn., on May 16, 1907. The blast and its disastrous effect has been described by Mr.
Jan 1, 2008
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Journal: 100 Years / Firing Blasts by Electricity
By Robert Hopler
The use of electrical fuzes is rapidly superseding the old cap and fuse method of firing blasts. It is therefore desirable that the details of this kind of blasting should be more generally understood
Jan 1, 2006
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Journal: 100 Years / Handling Explosives (Excerpts) Aetna Powder Company (126 pp) Chicago, 1913
By Robert Hopler
A detonator is a copper tube about a quarter of an inch in diameter and an inch and a half long, closed at one end and containing in the closed end a small charge of fulminate of mercury, which has be
Jan 1, 2014
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Journal: 100 Years / Harper’s Weekly New York May 21, 1870 / (Continued from the March/April 2006 Journal of Explosives Engineering) / The Value of Detonating Caps in Blasting
By Robert Hopler
It is the nature of the initial detonation to the powder around the cap which governs the greater or less effect of the explosion of the whole charge. The cap communicates to the first particles of po
Jan 1, 2007
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Journal: 100 Years / Illinois Powder Manufacturing Company Catalog issued May 1, 1909
By Robert Hopler
RBH Note: The Illinois Powder Manufacturing Company was established in 1907 and was acquired in 1957 by American Cyanamid. The latter company left the explosives business in 1969.
Jan 1, 2010
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Journal: 100 Years / In The Circuit Court of the United States For The District Of Delaware United States of America, Petitioner vs E.I. DuPont De Nemours and Company and Others, Defendants July 13, 1907 Origin of the Conspiracy and the Various
By Robert Hopler
That some time in the year 1872 there was organized an association composed of practically all of the manufacturers of gunpowder and other high explosives in the United States, the members of which sa
Jan 1, 2008
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Journal: 100 Years / MILITARY ENGINEERING (PART IV) MINING AND DEMOLITIONS General Staff, War Office, 1910 LONDON Copyright
By Robert Hopler
SECTION 9.---BORING AND BLASTING.*155. Blasting is the operation of bringing down and detaching from its bed or position masses of material by means of explosives.
Jan 1, 2011
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Journal: 100 Years / Mining & Scientific Press San Francisco March 18, 1905
By Robert Hopler
This article, advocating having employees whose specific job would be to fire blasts in underground coal mines in llinois, was written 5 years prior to the establishment of the U.S. Bureau of Mines,
Jan 1, 2006
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Journal: 100 Years / New Farms for Old
By Robert Hopler
True there is a certain proportion of nitro-glycerin in dynamite cartridges, but the dangerous explosive is scientifically compounded with wood pulp and some other ingredients in such a way that it ca
Jan 1, 2012
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Journal: 100 Years / Petroleum By Sir Beverton Redwood London: Charles Griffin & Company, Limited 1906 Copyright
By Robert Hopler
Torpedoing Wells. – On the completion of the drilling, or when the production is found to decrease, it is usual to “torpedo” the well to increase the flow. This process was patented in 1862 by Colonel
Jan 1, 2007
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Journal: 100 Years / Postcard mailed from Ironwood, Michigan, 13 April 1909 / A Primer on Explosives for Coal Miners
By Clarence Hall, Charles E. Monroe
Squibs, Fuse, and Detonators It has been made clear in the discussion of combustion and explosion and the description of various explosives that they can be caused to explode by various means. All of
Jan 1, 2010
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Journal: 100 Years / Rock Drilling With Particular Reference to Open Cut Excavation and Submarine Rock Removal.
By W. L. Saunders, Richard T. Dana
The dynamites are graded according to the percentage of nitroglycerin that they contain. Thus a “40% powder” would be one in which the sticks, weighing one-half pound each, would include one-fifth of
Jan 1, 2013